State Laws Banning Video Games Still Unconstitutional

from the again-and-again-and-again dept

It’s amazing that despite court after court after court after court pointing out that attempts to put in place laws that ban the sale of video games are unconstitutional, states keep on trying. Last year, Illinois had its law shot down as unconstitutional, and an Appeals Court has now upheld the ruling, pointing out that the ban violates the First Amendment. The same has been found in Michigan, Minnesota, Louisiana, Oklahoma and a few other states as well. However, politicians keep pushing forward with such plans because it plays well with some voters. Update Adam Thierer notes that this makes the score Gamers 10, Censors 0, and points out just how much this useless effort has cost taxpayers.


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Comments on “State Laws Banning Video Games Still Unconstitutional”

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15 Comments
Baal says:

,,!,, to those against video games

It’s a conspiracy I tell ya. They are trying to keep us down. They are also shooting images into our mind to suppress us from a revolution. I’m selling the specially made, highly crafted Reynolds wrap hats to keep those dirty bastards from getting our thoughts! Next you’ll have to piss a certain way without getting a fine or thrown in jail. Keep that happy face or they’ll brain wash you again. OMG THE VOICES ARE EVERY WHERE!!!! MAKE IT STOP!!!

lol…screw the politicians. I remember hearing about a few that wanted to ban rap music and a few others because they thought that the groups were responsible for making kids kill. Imagine that some parents thought that too. Further investigation proved that it was more peer and the same parents that pissed n moaned’s fault.

Ban video games? I believe they tried something similar with a different product. Although highly different from electronics… prohibition was introduced and taken off the books just as fast. Video games won’t be any different. I’ll never give up my urge to kill computer generated objects.

PhysicsGuy says:

Insanity:

While I admire Einstein greatly I have one issue with that quote. You CAN do the same thing over and over again and expect different results. One example is running. I can run a mile my hardest over and over again and expect that over time the result of my measured mile time will change (the more i run consecutively in a day the longer it will take AND the more i run over several weeks or months the shorter it will take). Even in science you can expect different results from doing experiments over and over… it’s inevitable. it’s called %error. The average of all the experiments should correspond to the established theory (no guarantees on it corresponding to your hypothesis though ;)) but you can expect different results from each separate trial. there are certainly things in which this definition of insanity is completely applicable, but to define insanity in such a manner is borderline idiotic. i’m just hoping that quote was from a larger context or that someone mistranslated it…

Gabriel Tane (profile) says:

Re: Insanity:

While I’m not a physicist, nor a good friend of Albert, I’d have to say that the context of this quote was in regards to the laws of phyics. I think Al was trying to point out that you can’t expect something that can’t happen to happen, no matter how hard you want it to. It applies to the context of this article thus because no matter how hard these States may want anti-gaming laws, they just can’t do it.

Robby says:

“While I admire Einstein greatly I have one issue with that quote. You CAN do the same thing over and over again and expect different results. One example is running. I can run a mile my hardest over and over again and expect that over time the result of my measured mile time will change (the more i run consecutively in a day the longer it will take AND the more i run over several weeks or months the shorter it will take). Even in science you can expect different results from doing experiments over and over… it’s inevitable. it’s called %error. The average of all the experiments should correspond to the established theory (no guarantees on it corresponding to your hypothesis though ;)) but you can expect different results from each separate trial. there are certainly things in which this definition of insanity is completely applicable, but to define insanity in such a manner is borderline idiotic. i’m just hoping that quote was from a larger context or that someone mistranslated it…”

he meant under the same circumstances. in your example, its like trying to do an experiment with more than one variable changed each time.
with everything identical, including your body and mine, to the first time you ran it would happen the same way as the first time

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